Getting Better (guest blog post)

Today we have a short article from our guest blogger Johnno Nolan, who caught our attention in twitter when he said:
Great 2 hear the team talking soft dev. We go through an Agile in a Flash card every am and critique. Can feel devs caring again

Johnno Nolan's story is still in progress, but I felt that tweet was inspirational enough that I invited him to provide a short blog post, and he kindly submitted the following story.

I've worked here before. We developed with chaos. I left. They persuaded me to come back. They said it would be different. "We can do things a different way. Your way" they said. The chaos would be mine to tame. I accepted and returned.

The cold reality set in. The team was demotivated, resigned to the current system. Worse, we'd tried to implement 'Getting Better' before (I don't like to use the term Agile) but we'd lack courage and when the main change driver had gone, adoption fell by the wayside. There was mistrust, ignorance of doing things that way and then the team was asked to pick back up where they left off. So there's a been an open dialogue of what's been wrong and we've been focusing on the basics to 'Get Better'.

And we are.

I can look back a couple of months and we were not talking, not thinking, just accepting of the norm. Now we're learning together. Sometimes we have bad days, but today was a good one.

Before our stand-ups meetings we talk about one Agile In A Flash card. They say story cards are a placeholder for a conversation and that's exactly how we use them. We don't always agree with the card but we talk about it and try and understand. The cards provide a focal point.

Today was really productive, we finished more than we expected. We passed stories back because we didn't think they were good enough. We talked about design. We returned to the cards and talked more about process. For the first time in months we cared and we're proud of what we are doing.

We're not becoming Agile in a Flash but we're Getting Better Steadily.

Jeff and I are receiving several stories every week about how Agile In A Flash is helping teams re-engage with fundamentals. We'll be entertaining other guest bloggers in the future, in addition to providing some fresh content every month.

Card-Carrying Network Weaver

A welcome to Patrick Wilson-Welsh, seen enjoying his new deck of Agile In A Flash cards at the Agile And Beyond gathering in Dearborn, Michigan, where I dare say we had the most interesting table full of people in the entire room. Patrick really wanted these cards. Let us know how they're working out for you!

Card-carrying Agile Tester


This is Lisa Crispin, brilliant Agile tester and author, trainer, and early adopter of Agile In A Flash. Here you see her sharing deep testing insights with Jo, Edgar and Chester.

No animals were harmed or insulted in the making of this blog post.

Agile On A Desk

Dave Rooney, a card-carrying friend of Agile In A Flash, walked into a manager's office and what do you suppose he saw?


The astute observer will see all the cards are marked with either the compass rose ("The Plan" section) or else a waving pennant ("The Team" section). We intended those two sections to be especially interesting and useful for managers.

It does our hearts good to see Agile In A Flash in use. Your encouragement is always welcome here, in pictures, comments, tweets, purchases, or referrals!

Card-carrying Professional Scrum Developer Trainer


This is Andreas Ebbert-Karroum who is busy in Germany, leading codecentrics Agile Software Factory. He looks very happy to have his Agile In A Flash deck.

Card-carrying Team Effectiveness Amplifier

Say hello to George Dinwiddie. George is a well-known and well-respected software development coach and consultant, software blogger, and a Card-carrying Team Effectiveness Amplifier, and a friend of the Agile In A Flash effort (not to mention the authors).

Can you feel how the warmth of his personality radiates from this picture? Yeah, he's like that in person.

Restoring The Trust

Make sure you see Uncle Bob Martin's video Restoring The Trust, about the agile balance.  A certain deck of cards is prominently featured (thanks, Bob!) in the opening and closing moments.

There are a few other cards relating to balance, but clearly the Manifesto card is very close to Bob's heart,  as he is one of the original authors and signers of the both Craftsman and Agile manifestos.

Card-carrying Seer of System Dynamics

(in dramatic Black & White, no less!)

This is Esther Derby, a management consultant and Agilist who is helping companies to put a more human face on software development. We highly recommend her conference talks and blog. Here Esther has a brand-new deck of "Agile in a Flash" and a happy smile.

What's On Your Wall?



Tim describes how the Agile In A Flash cards help make his workspace more informative.

Agile in a Flash Card Index

In order to keep Agile in a Flash very low cost and actually make a buck or two, Tim and I were pressured to keep the number of cards to a very minimum. That's why you'll see no author bios, for example, and no index / table of contents. (Of course, if the book takes off and you buy bajillions of copies, we can likely justify an index.)

Without further ado, here's the index of cards (which also tells you, by omission, which blog entries here are not in this deck--if, uh, all goes well with sales, we'll be doing a second deck):

The Idea:
  1. Why Agile?
  2. The Agile Values, aka the Agile Manifesto
  3. Principles Behind the Agile Manifesto
  4. Role-Playing in Agile
  5. Agile Success Factors
  6. Courage
  7. Redefining Discipline
  8. Pillars of Software Craftmanship
  9. Toyota Production System (TPS) Principles
  10. The Right Process
  11. Got Organizational Obstinance?
  12. Got Individual Obstinance
  13. Don't Get Too Deep in Technical Debt
The Plan:
  1. Incremental Everything
  2. Embrace Change
  3. Reach Consensus on Story Priority
  4. INVEST in Your Stories
  5. Categorize Requirements with FURPS
  6. Sail on the Three C's
  7. Shrink XL Stories to Fit
  8. Acceptable Acceptance Tests
  9. Acceptance Test Design Principles
  10. Story Estimation Fundamentals
  11. A Winning Hand for Planning Poker
  12. Iterate with Principle
  13. Communication-SMITH with Information Radiators
The Team:
  1. Shu-Ha-Ri
  2. The Only Agile Tools You'll Ever Need
  3. Successful Stand-up Meetings
  4. ABCs of Pair Programming
  5. Retrospectives
  6. When Not Pairing
  7. How to Be a Team Player
  8. Collective Code Ownership
  9. Coding Standards
  10. Is Your Team Circling the Drain?
  11. Pair Programming Smells
  12. Stop the Bad Test Death Spiral
  13. How to Stay Valuable
The Code:
  1. Eight Crucial Practices of Agile Programmers
  2. Build Superior Systems with Simple Design
  3. The Seven Code Virtues
  4. ReallyMeaningful Names
  5. The TDD Cycle
  6. FIRST Properties of Unit Tests
  7. Triple A for Tight Tests
  8. Prevent Code Rot Through Refactoring
  9. Refactoring Inhibitors
  10. Field Guide to Mocks
  11. Break Unit Test Writer's Block
  12. Test Double Troubles
  13. TDD Process Smells